PPA HAS $3 MILLION LOBBYING BUDGET FOR THIS YEAR
24 April 2009
The intention is to overturn UIGEA, or at
least create a carve-out for online poker
The chairman of the Poker Players Association, former
Senator Alphonse D'Amato, told Associated Press this
week that the pressure group has a lobbying budget of $3
million that it will devote to overturning the Unlawful
Internet Gambling Enforcement Act, or deploy to at the
very least carve out an exemption that would legalise
and regulate online poker.
D'Amato says his
organisation plans to spend the $3 million on lobbying
in this session of Congress, and that the generous
funding comes from the Interactive Gaming Council, a
Vancouver, British Columbia-based trade association for
online casinos, as well as from its poker player
members.
The PPA is up against some tough and
well-heeled competition, D'Amato pointed out. The
National Football League says gambling threatens the
integrity of its games and has made preserving the
Internet ban a priority in Washington. Last year, the
league hired a full-time lobbyist and started a
political action committee to make campaign donations.
At least half the $16 billion Internet gambling
industry, which is largely hosted on overseas sites, is
estimated to be fueled by bettors in the United States,
Associated Press informs.
D'Amato lost his
re-election race to Democrat Chuck Schumer in 1998.
Since then a lot of poker playing has moved to the
Internet.
“How dare you come into my house and
tell me what I can and can't do on the Internet!”
D'Amato said in his interview with the news service.
“It's a cause for personal choice and freedom that I've
always thought epitomizes what this country's about."
However, the NFL apparently sees things
differently.
“We are opposed to more gambling on
our games which is what would occur if the 2006 [UIGEA]
law was overturned,” league spokesman Brian McCarthy
told the Associated Press writer.
“We understand
that illegal gambling currently occurs but there is
little we can do about that,” he added. “However, we can
exercise our right to oppose Internet betting on our
games. ... Gambling on our games – online or offline –
threatens the integrity of our games and all the values
they represent.”
Other sports leagues have
backed the UIGEA ban, including the NCAA and
professional baseball, basketball and hockey, although
the NFL has spearheaded opposition to attempts to
overturn the contentious law. The Christian Coalition is
also reported to be lobbying to preserve the ban.
D'Amato said he had no problem with letting leagues
ban betting on their games, but argued that online poker
should be legal.
HHe argued that the UIGEA didn't
provide a clear definition of unlawful Internet
gambling, instead referring to existing federal and
state laws, which themselves provoke differing
interpretations.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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